developable-surface

Developable surface

In mathematics, a developable surface is a surface with zero Gaussian curvature. That is, it is "surface" that can be flattened onto a plane without distortion (i.e. "stretching" or "compressing"). Conversely, it is a surface which can be made by transforming a plane (i.e. "folding", "bending", "rolling", "cutting" and/or "gluing"). In three dimensions all developable surfaces are ruled surface. There are developable surfaces in R4 which are not ruled.

Planes (trivially); which may be viewed as a cylinder whose cross-section is a line

Tangent "developable" surfaces; which are constructed by extending the tangent lines of a spacial curve.

Spheres are not "developable" surfaces under any metric as they cannot be unrolled onto a plane. The torus has a metric under which it is "developable", but such a torus does not embed into 3D-space. It can, however, be realized in four dimensions.

Formally, in mathematics, a "developable" surface is a surface with zero Gaussian curvature. One consequence of this is that all "developable" surfaces embedded in 3D-space are "ruled" surfaces (though hyperboloids are examples of "ruled" surfaces which are not "developable"). Because of this, many "developable" surfaces can be visualised as the surface formed by moving a "straight" line in space. For example, a cone is formed by keeping one end-point of a line fixed whilst moving the other end-point in a circle.